| About the book |
Mitchell Dean focuses on `governing societies? as a distinctive project that continues to define political life today. The book offers a critical analysis of contemporary liberal approaches to governing societies both in domestic and international affairs. Governing Societies provides an overview of current perspectives and theories and examines recent transformations in techniques and rationalities of rule. It presents a new argument for the importance and transformation of sovereignty and powers of life and death and how they are integral to governing liberal-democratic societies. The book is key reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of sociology and politics, as well as researchers and academics. |
| About the authors |
| Table of contents |
Acknowledgements Introduction: Setting the scene Part one: Dilemmas Zombie categories? Ungoverning societies Individualization Part two: Diagnostics Life and death Authoritarian liberalism Part three: Departures Sovereignty and violence State of exception Contemporary liberal exceptionalism Conclusion Notes References |



